2 Pinoys killed, 2 others hurt in Doha gas blast

report from Maxxy Santiago, ABS-CBN News Middle East Bureau

DOHA (UPDATED) - Two Filipinos were killed while 2 others were injured when a gas tank exploded at a Turkish restaurant in the Qatari capital of Doha on Thursday, Philippine embassy officials said.

The embassy has yet to identify the victims.

Authorities in the Gulf Arab state said at least 12 people were killed and about 30 were wounded in the explosion, according to reports from Reuters and Al Jazeera English.

A security source told Reuters the blast at the Istanbul restaurant was accidental. Another security source at the scene said two Asian children were among the dead.

Major General Saad bin Jassim al-Khalifi, Qatar's head of public security, said Arabs, Asians and one Qatari were among the dead and wounded.

Preliminary investigations suggested that a gas tank exploded, setting off a fire and causing part of the building to collapse, he told a news conference. But investigations were continuing to discover what caused the gas tank to explode.

"It was a very big blast," he said. "It blew away cars and the shrapnel scattered 50 or 100 meters away."

Chunks of masonry, metal debris and shattered glass lay outside the restaurant in a northwestern district of the city. Cars apparently crumpled by the explosion stood nearby.

The incident was the deadliest in Qatar since May 2012, when at least 19 foreign nationals, including 13 children, were killed by a fire in an upscale shopping mall.

A member of Qatar's ruling family was among five people sentenced to prison by a court last year for negligence over the fire. The blaze was caused by faulty wiring in Doha's Villagio Mall and quickly spread to a nursery, the court found.

The gas- and oil-rich Gulf Arab state, with an estimated national population of at least 200,000, has one of the highest standards of living in the world. The bulk of the two million population of Qatar are foreigners.

The area around the Istanbul restaurant is on the outskirts of the capital near Landmark mall, a well-known shopping complex usually busy area with families.

"I was eating in a restaurant close by and suddenly heard a big (blast) and everything around me exploded," Abdul-Rahman Abdul-Kareem, an Indian driver who was eating in a restaurant nearby, told Reuters at Hamad hospital. "I have too much damage now, my legs are broken and my head is open." - with reports from Reuters

Rescue workers and policemen stand amid debris near a Turkish restaurant following a gas tank explosion in Doha, Qatar on Thursday that killed at least 12 people and injured 30 others. Reuters photo